Visualization of a water-selective pore by electron crystallography in vitreous ice

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Abstract

The water-selective pathway through the aquaporin-1 membrane channel has been visualized by fitting an atomic model to a 3.7-Å resolution three-dimensional density map. This map was determined by analyzing images and electron diffraction patterns of lipid-reconstituted two-dimensional crystals of aquaporin-1 preserved in vitrified buffer in the absence of any additive. The aqueous pathway is characterized by a size-selective pore that is ≈4.0 ± 0.5Å in diameter, spans a length of ≈18Å, and bends by ≈25° as it traverses the bilayer. This narrow pore is connected by wide, funnel-shaped openings at the extracellular and cytoplasmic faces. The size-selective pore is outlined mostly by hydrophobic residues, resulting in a relatively inert pathway conducive to diffusion-limited water flow. The apex of the curved pore is close to the locations of the in-plane pseudo-2-fold symmetry axis that relates the N- and C-terminal halves and the conserved, functionally important N76 and N192 residues.

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Ren, G., Reddy, V. S., Cheng, A., Melnyk, P., & Mitra, A. K. (2001). Visualization of a water-selective pore by electron crystallography in vitreous ice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 98(4), 1398–1403. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.98.4.1398

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